Buchholz pitched seven scoreless innings in Boston’s 10-1 win at Toronto on Wednesday, and Tazawa faced two batters in relief during Thursday’s 3-1 over the Jays.

Morris believes Buchholz was throwing a spitball.

"I found out because the guys on the video camera showed it to me right after the game," Morris told ESPN.com. "I didn't see it during the game. They showed it to me and said, 'What do you think of this?' and I said, 'Well, he's throwing a spitter. Cause that's what it is."

But Morris didn’t stop there. He also accused Buchholz of loading up his left forearm with a foreign substance.

"It was all over his forearm, all over the lower part of his T-shirt, it's all in his hair," Morris told ESPN.com. "I can't prove anything. I can't prove anything. Funny thing, the way the game is played today. In our generation, every player, every coach would have seen it, the umpire would have gone out and made him change, made him stop and that changes everything. Or else they throw him out of the game. So what kind of bugs all of us is nothing is done here."

Hayhurst sent out a series of Tweets, though this was the most inflammatory:

Forget the hair, I just saw video of Buchholz loading the ball with some Eddie Harris worthy slick'em painted up his left forearm. Wow.

"It bothers me immensely," Farrell told the team’s website. "When someone is going to make an accusation, and in this case, on cheating because of something they have seen on TV—he has rosin on his arm. I think rosin was designed to get a grip. The fact is that he has rosin on his arm.

"I've seen some people that have brought photographs to me, they are false. The fact is the guy is 6-0, he has pitched his tail off and people are going to point to him cheating? Unfounded."

Buchholz, named the AL’s pitcher of the month for April, maintains he is innocent.

"I put a little bit of water on my hip just to get it a little moist, because sometimes the balls they throw to you feel like cue balls off a pool table," Buchholz told the team’s website. "You have to find a way to get grip. Definitely no foreign objects or substances on my arm.

"I'm not doing anything wrong, so if I have to answer questions about it, that's the world we live in."

As for Tazawa, Jays radio broadcaster Mike Wilner believes the righthander also was using a foreign substance that was smeared on his forearm. Wilner’s tweet: